Fotografía de autor

Helen Chappell

Autor de Dead Duck

31+ Obras 399 Miembros 4 Reseñas 1 Preferidas

Sobre El Autor

Writer Helen Chappell, a columnist for the Tidewater Times and frequent contributor to the Baltimore Sun and the Washington Post, lives on Maryland's Eastern Shore.

Incluye los nombres: Helen Chappell, Rebecca Baldwin

Nota de desambiguación:

(eng) Rebecca Baldwin is a pseudonym that Helen Chappell used to publish Regency Romances.

Series

Obras de Helen Chappell

Dead Duck (1997) 41 copias
Giving up the Ghost (1999) 33 copias
A Whole World of Trouble (2003) 27 copias
Ghost of a Chance (1998) 24 copias
Peerless Theodosia (1980) 17 copias
Cassandra Knot (1979) 15 copias
Sandition Quadrille (1981) 12 copias
Matchmakers (1980) 12 copias
The Oysterback Tales (1994) 11 copias
A Fright of Ghosts (2006) 11 copias
Season Abroad (1981) 11 copias

Obras relacionadas

Indian Sculpture: A Travelling Exhibition (1971) — Fotógrafo, algunas ediciones4 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Baldwin, Rebecca
Brooks, Caroline
Fecha de nacimiento
1947
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Maryland, USA
Educación
Franconia College
Ocupaciones
teacher
columnist
Aviso de desambiguación
Rebecca Baldwin is a pseudonym that Helen Chappell used to publish Regency Romances.

Miembros

Reseñas

How disappointing! I purchased this at the Maritime Museum in St. Michaels, thinking it would be a book about the dead (and their resting places) of the Eastern Shore.

But the book was filled with anecdotal material that was interesting all the same.

The photography was...well, I'm no photographer, but surely better and clearer shots could have been taken of the headstones and their epitaphs? But lots of pictures!
½
 
Denunciada
kaulsu | Oct 19, 2012 |
Fiction,romance,European historical,piffle loan
 
Denunciada
fredalss | Dec 25, 2009 |
Of the four Maryland series that I am familiar with (Laura Lippman's Tess Monaghan, Tim Cockey's Hitchcock Sewell, and Barbara Lee's Eve Elliott, being the others), this is easily my favorite.

A book with a ghost as a continuing major character could be unfortunately twee, but in Helen Chappell's hands it is sardonically funny. Chappell manages to make this all seem reasonable. Hollis Ball is an engaging character and it is a pleasure to spend time with her. The books' humor about various follies of humankind, fanatic collectors featuring in this volume, are extremely amusing.

The book has a very strong sense of place - my branch of the family moved away from the Eastern Shore a couple of generations ago, so I can't pose as an expert, but certainly the local views of what Chappell calls the 3Rs, rich retired Republicans, are dead on. How clannish are the old Eastern shore families? Well, my great-aunt and uncle moved from Chestertown to Easton (both on the Eastern shore) shortly after their marriage. My aunt told my mother that after 55 years in Easton, she felt that they had almost been accepted. On the other hand, when my parents retired to the Eastern shore, they did find that their connections made them somewhat more acceptable.

Two points that might be considered a weakness. Chappell introduces an African-American States Attorney, but she really doesn't have local Blacks as characters. Discussing race can get touchy - such a minefield that I'm not sure that I can really fault Chappell for not getting into it in a book that is intended to be light. I'm not sure how realistic it would be in this case - the de facto separation in some places can be a really strong barrier.

The other is a pet peeve: Chappell keeps referring to the local upper strata as WASPS, Aryans, rich Protestants, etc. People tend to use WASP as if the "W" stood for wealthy, but in fact it stands for "white". Aren't the Balls WASPS? There are a fair number of WASCs in Maryland, since it was founded to serve as a haven for English Catholics, but the Balls are Methodist. Aren't most white people on the Eastern Shore "Aryan" and Protestant? I myself am a half-WASP, if you use the word strictly and a whole-WASP in the loose sense, and I get very tired of people using WASP to imply boring, complacent and rich.

Well, tantrum over. I have found the two books that I have read very enjoyable, and I hope that the series will continue.
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
PuddinTame | Aug 25, 2009 |
This is a light Regency romance that I thoroughly enjoyed. This centers around the motif of the couple marrying on impulse (he needs a bride to inherit, she can't wait to get away from home), and then having to work out their life together and fall in love later.
½
 
Denunciada
PuddinTame | Jul 27, 2009 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
31
También por
1
Miembros
399
Popularidad
#60,805
Valoración
½ 3.4
Reseñas
4
ISBNs
44
Idiomas
1
Favorito
1

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